Method for Holographic Mastering and Replication
20220057749 · 2022-02-24
Assignee
Inventors
- Milan Momcilo Popovich (Leicester, GB)
- Jonathan David Waldern (Los Altos Hills, CA, US)
- Alastair John Grant (San Jose, CA, US)
Cpc classification
G03H1/202
PHYSICS
G03H2001/207
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A method for producing holograms with a multiplicity of holographic prescriptions from a single master is provided. A multiplicity of holographic substrates each containing a first hologram is stacked on a second holographic recording medium substrate. The first hologram is designed to diffract light from a first direction into a second direction. When expose to illumination from the first direction zero order and diffracted light from each first hologram interfere in the second holographic recording medium substrate forming a second hologram. The second hologram is then copied into a third holographic recording medium substrate to provide the final copy hologram.
Claims
1. A method for producing a pluarlity of holograms with a plurality of prescriptions from common master hologram, the method comprising: providing a master hologram configured to provide diffracted and zero-order beams angles for each of a plurality of incident beam directions; providing an intermediate holographic medium; providing a contact copy holographic medium; providing a light source to provide a plurality of incidence angles on said master hologram; illuminating said master hologram with a light of a first polarization in a first direction; diffracting said light into a zero order beam in said first direction and a diffracted beam in said second direction using said master hologram; interfering said zero order beam and said diffracted beam in said intermediate holographic medium to form an intermediate master hologram; placing said intermediate master hologram in contact with said contact copy holographic medium; further illuminating an external surface of said intermediate master hologram with a second light in said first direction, said intermediate master hologram diffracting said second light into a second zero order beam in said first direction and a second diffracted beam in said second direction, said second diffracted and second first order beams interfering in said contact copy holographic medium to form a contact copy hologram.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein said steps of illuminating, diffracting, interfering, placing and further illuminating are repeated for a multiplicity of values of said first and second directions.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the first and second directions falls within the diffraction efficiency angular bandwidth of said master hologram.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the master hologram is provided by the steps of: configuring a laser holographic recording apparatus to form a first recording beam in said first direction and a second recording beam in said second direction; providing N substrates each containing a master holographic medium; and interfering said first and second beams within each said master holographic medium substrate to form a first hologram in each said substrate.
5. The method of claim 1, where said master hologram includes at least one selected from the group consisting of: a liquid crystal and polymer material system, a holographic photopolymer, and a surface relief grating.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein said master hologram has a modulation exceeding that required to achieve a target beam ratio of said diffracted and zero order beams.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein said master hologram has a modulation exceeding by up to 5% that required to achieve a target beam ratio of said diffracted and zero order beams.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein said master hologram has a modulation exceeding by up to 10% that required to achieve a target beam ratio of said diffracted and zero order beams.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising providing one of either a half wave plate and a linear polarizer and disposing it between said intermediate holographic medium and said master hologram.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein said contact copy hologram is a copy of said intermediate master hologram and said intermediate master hologram is a copy of said master hologram.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein said zero order and diffracted beams in at least one of the diffracting or further illuminating steps have power substantially in the ratio of 1:1.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein said intermediate master hologram and said contact copy holographic medium are separated by an air gap.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein at least one index matching optical layer is provided.
14. The method of claim 1, wherein said contact copy holographic medium forms part of a mechanically translatable continuous lamina.
15. The method of claim 1, further comprising providing a voltage generator for applied a voltage across at least one of said intermediate holographic medium and said contact copy holographic medium characterized in that said voltage varies the refractive index modulation of at least one of said intermediate master hologram and said contact copy hologram during the further illuminating.
16. The method of claim 1, further comprising providing a voltage generator for applied a voltage across said master hologram characterized in that said voltage varies the refractive index modulation of said master hologram during the illuminating, diffracting and interfering steps.
17. The method of claim 1, wherein the at least one medium selected from the group of said intermediate holographic medium and said contact copy holographic medium is one of a material selected from the group of a photo thermal refractive or photopolymer, a forward mode HPDLC mixture or a reverse mode HPDLC mixture.
18. The method of claim 1, wherein said intermediate holographic medium and contact copy holographic medium are supported by one of either a glass or a plastic substrate.
19. The method of claim 1, wherein said intermediate holograhic medium and contact copy holographic medium are supported by substrates.
20. The method of claim 1, wherein said contact copy hologram forms part of a waveguide.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0072] The invention will now be further described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings. It will apparent to those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced with some or all of the present invention as disclosed in the following description. For the purposes of explaining the invention well-known features of optical technology known to those skilled in the art of optical design and visual displays have been omitted or simplified in order not to obscure the basic principles of the invention. Unless otherwise stated the term “on-axis” in relation to a ray or a beam direction refers to propagation parallel to an axis normal to the surfaces of the optical components described in relation to the invention. In the following description the terms light, ray, beam and direction may be used interchangeably and in association with each other to indicate the direction of propagation of light energy along rectilinear trajectories. Parts of the following description will be presented using terminology commonly employed by those skilled in the art of optical design. The term “grating” may be used to describe a hologram. It should also be noted that in the following description of the invention repeated usage of the phrase “in one embodiment” does not necessarily refer to the same embodiment.
[0073] The present invention provides a method for producing holograms with a multiplicity of holographic prescriptions from a single master. The master which will be described as a first hologram is characterised by a wide angular bandwidth. Desirably, the first hologram also has large index modulation. This allows a wide range of input and diffracted beam angles to be generated by the first hologram. For each set of input and diffracted beam angle an intermediate master (second) hologram is recorded. The resulting set of intermediate master (second) holograms may then be used to contact copy the hologram into the desired copy medium to provide a copy (third) hologram. A wide bandwidth hologram will have a small thickness which results have relatively low diffraction efficiency. In the proposed method the problem of low diffraction efficiency is overcome by stacking a multiplicity of holographic substrates each containing the first hologram. This stack is then overlaid on stacked on a second holographic recording medium substrate. The first hologram is designed to diffract light from a first direction into a second direction. When exposed to illumination from the first direction zero order and diffracted light from each (first) hologram in the stack interfere in the second holographic recording medium substrate forming a second hologram. The second hologram is then copied into a third holographic recording medium substrate to provide the final copy hologram. The invention may be used to master and replicate any type of hologram in any type of holographic recording material. The invention may be used to master and replicated passive or switchable holograms. The holograms may be single elements or switchable arrays as described in PCT/GB2013/000273. Voltages may be applied across the second hologram to control the index modulation and hence fine tune beam ratios during the final contact copying stage. Voltages may also be applied across the first holograms during the recording of the second hologram.
[0074] In one embodiment of the invention there is provided a method for mastering and replicating holograms, the method comprising: [0075] a) providing N substrates each containing a first hologram for diffracting incident light from a first direction into diffracted light in a second direction; providing a second holographic recording medium; and providing a third holographic recording medium; [0076] b) stacking in sequence the first holograms 1-N onto the second holographic recording medium; [0077] c) illuminating external surface of the first hologram N with light of a first polarization in a first direction; [0078] d) the first holograms 1-N diffracting the light into zero order light in the first direction and diffracted light in the second direction; [0079] e) the first direction light and the second direction light interfering in the second holographic recording medium to form a second hologram; [0080] f) placing the second hologram in contact with the third holographic recording medium; [0081] g) illuminating external surface of the second hologram with light in the first direction; [0082] h) the second hologram diffracting the light into zero order light in the first direction and diffracted light in the second direction; [0083] i) the diffracted and first order light interfering in the third holographic recording medium to form a third hologram.
[0084] In one embodiment of the invention steps c) to i) are repeated for a multiplicity of values of the first and second directions. The first and second directions are limited by the diffraction efficiency angular bandwidth of said first hologram.
[0085] A method of replicating a hologram in one embodiment of the invention in accordance with the basic principles of the invention is shown in the flow diagram in
[0090] At step 2005 the first and second direction light interferes to form a second hologram in the second holographic recording medium. [0091] At step 2006 place the second hologram in contact with the third holographic recording medium. [0092] At step 2007 illuminate the second hologram with light in the first direction. [0093] At step 2008 the second hologram provides 0-order light in the first direction and diffracted light in the second direction. [0094] At step 2009 the first and second direction light interferes to form the third hologram.
[0095] Note that in terms of defining the holographic prescription a hologram having construction angles in the first and second directions is equivalent to the same hologram diffracting incident light from a first direction into diffracted light in a second direction.
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[0097] In one embodiment of the invention the first holograms 1,N are provided by the steps of firstly, configuring a laser holographic recording apparatus to form a first recording beam in the first direction and a second recording beams in the second direction; secondly, providing N substrates each containing a first holographic medium; and, thirdly, the first and second beams interfering within each the first holographic medium substrate to form the first hologram in each substrate. The present invention does not assume that any particular holographic recording process or HPDLC material is used to fabricate the first holograms. Any of the processes and material systems currently used to fabricate SBGs may be used such as for example the ones disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5, 942,157 by Sutherland, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,751,452 by Tanaka. The master may be recorded using currently available industrial processes such as the ones provided by companies such as Holographix LLC (MA). Ideally, the master would be recorded using remote computer controlled equipment, which by removing human presence eliminates vibrations and thermal variations that may adversely affect the quality of the recording process. Ideally, the master recording laboratory should be protected from vibrations from external disturbances. Desirably, the master hologram recording equipment will provide active fringe stabilization.
[0098] In the preferred embodiments the first hologram and third (copy) holograms are SBGs. In one embodiment the SBGs are reverse mode such the hologram diffracts when a voltage is applied and remains optically passive at all other times. A reverse mode SBG will provide lower power consumption. A reverse mode HPDLC and methods for fabricating reverse mode SBG devices is disclosed in U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/573,066 with filing date 24 Aug. 2011 by the present inventors entitled IMPROVEMENTS TO HOLOGRAPHIC POLYMER DISPERSED LIQUID CRYSTAL MATERIALS AND which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. Ultimately, the inventors aim to make replica SBGs with plastic substrates and flexible transparent conductive coatings (to replace ITO). Plastic SBG technology suitable for the present invention is also disclosed in U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/573,066. A reverse mode SBG is more ideally suited to mastering as it avoids the degradation of SBG material that occurs with UV recording. Advantageously, the SBGs will used thin flexible glass substrates such as the ones developed by Corning and Schott driven by the touch panel and smart phone industries.
[0099] In one embodiment of the invention the first holograms 1,N are surface relief structures such as binary structures. Such holograms would typically require index matching layers between the hologram layers
[0100] In one embodiment of the invention step a) further comprises providing a half wave plate (HWP) and step c) further comprises disposing the HWP between the holographic recording medium substrate and the first hologram stack. In a further embodiment step a) further comprises providing a linear polarizer and in step c) further comprises disposing the linear polarizer between the HWP and the first hologram stack.
[0101] In one embodiment of the invention the first holographic recording medium is a HPDLC for recording a SBG, the second holographic recording medium is a holographic photopolymer and the third holographic recording medium is a holographic photopolymer. In one embodiment of the invention the third hologram is copy of the second hologram and the second hologram is a copy of the first hologram. In one embodiment of the invention the third holographic recording medium comprises HPDLC material components for forming one of a forward mode SBG or a reverse mode SBG. In one embodiment of the invention the zero order light and diffracted light in at least one step d) and step i) have power substantially in the ratio of 1:1. In one embodiment of the invention the third holographic recording medium has a substrate fabricated from optical plastic. In one embodiment of the invention the second hologram and the third holographic recording medium are separated by an air gap. In one embodiment of the invention the second hologram and the third holographic recording medium are in contact. In one embodiment of the invention the third holographic recording medium forms part of a mechanically translatable continuous lamina.
[0102] In one embodiment of the invention there is further provided a voltage generator for applied a voltage across at least one of the second hologram and the third holographic recording medium according to the principles disclosed in PCT/GB2013/000273 entitled ELECTRICALLY CONTROLLABLE MASTER HOLOGRAM FOR CONTACT COPYING. The voltage varies the refractive index modulation of at least one of the second hologram and the third during steps g) to i).
[0103] In one embodiment of the invention the second holographic recording medium is one of a photo thermal refractive or holographic photopolymer, a forward mode HPDLC mixture or a reverse mode HPDLC mixture. In one embodiment of the invention the third holographic recording medium is one of a photo thermal refractive or photopolymer, a forward mode HPDLC mixture or a reverse mode HPDLC mixture. In one embodiment of the invention the diffracting thickness of the first hologram is less than or equal to 1 micron. In one embodiment of the invention the diffracting thickness of the first hologram is less than or equal to 2 micron.
[0104] In one embodiment of the invention illustrated in
[0117] In one embodiment of the invention steps d) to 1) are repeated for a multiplicity of values of the first and second directions, wherein the first and second directions are limited by the diffraction efficiency angular bandwidth of the first hologram. For example
[0118] In the embodiment of
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[0120] A method of replicating a hologram according to a preferred embodiment of the invention in accordance with the basic principles of the invention is shown in the flow diagram in
[0124] At step 2014 master SBGs (1-N) provide 0-order light in the first direction and diffracted light in the second direction.
[0125] At step 2015 the first and second direction light interferes to form the second hologram in the holographic photopolymer recording medium. [0126] At step 2016 place the second hologram in contact with the HPDLC recording medium.
[0127] At step 2017 illuminate the second hologram with S-polarized light in the first direction. [0128] At step 2018 the second hologram provides 0-order light in the first direction and diffracted light in the second direction. [0129] At step 2019 the first and second direction light interferes to form a copy SBG.
[0130] In one embodiment of the invention the first hologram is a surface relief hologram such as binary grating. A method of replicating a hologram in one embodiment of the invention in accordance with the basic principles of the invention is shown in the flow diagram in
[0140] As illustrated in
[0141] At step 2031 provide: N hologram substrates each containing a first hologram having construction angles in first and second directions; a second holographic recording medium; a third holographic recording medium; and a voltage generator. [0142] At step 2032 stack the hologram substrates (1-N) onto the second holographic recording medium. [0143] At step 2033 illuminate the hologram substrates (1-N) with light in the first direction. [0144] At step 2034 the hologram substrates (1-N) provide 0-order light in the first direction and diffracted light in the second direction. [0145] At step 2035 the first and second direction light interferes to form the second hologram in the second holographic recording medium.
[0146] At step 2036 place the second hologram in contact with the third holographic recording medium and connect the voltage generator to the second hologram. [0147] At step 2037 illuminate the second hologram with light in the first direction. Apply a voltage across the second hologram. [0148] At step 2038 the second hologram provides 0-order light in the first direction and diffracted light in the second direction. [0149] At step 2039 the first and second direction light interferes to form a third hologram.
[0150] A further method of replicating a hologram in one embodiment of the invention in accordance with the basic principles of the invention is shown in the flow diagram in
[0160] In one embodiment of the invention steps are repeated for a predefined number of holographic prescriptions, that is, for a multiplicity of vectors defining the first and second directions. One first hologram (master) is used to produce all replicas at each prescription. The first holograms (1-N) are illumination by each first direction vector of a predefined set in turn. The first and second directions are limited by the diffraction efficiency angular bandwidth of said first hologram.
[0161] A method of replicating a hologram in one embodiment of the invention (based on the embodiment of
[0173] It should be understood by those skilled in the art that while the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. Various modifications, combinations, sub-combinations and alterations may occur depending on design requirements and other factors insofar as they are within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.